The Conversation About Collagen During Pregnancy I Wish We’d Been Having Years Ago
- Nelea Lane, CMWC

- 2 hours ago
- 10 min read

If one of my three granddaughters called me tomorrow and told me she was pregnant, I would not be composed about it (possible understatement).
I would cry. I would talk too fast. I would immediately start picturing her with a baby and our family with one more little person in it.
And then the memories would start.
That is what happens when your children start having children -- and then their children. You remember everything. The waiting. The wondering. That miscarriage. The second-guessing every single decision, including the ones that probably didn’t matter and the ones that did. The swollen ankles. The mashed potatoes and hot sauce at 11pm — I don’t know why that was the combination, but it was non-negotiable. The praying. The sonograms. Getting the room ready and then changing your mind about where you put the dresser. Picking out names but not knowing if the baby would be a boy or girl. Being afraid my Mom wouldn't get there in time.
The exhaustion that hit in ways nobody had fully warned me about.
Not realizing until much later that every single moment was one I’d never get back.
Eventually, after the happy tears, old stories, and hearing her new fears, I would start thinking about something no one ever talked to me about when I was expecting.
Not because people were withholding information. We simply did not know what we know today. One of those things is collagen during pregnancy.
Why Collagen During Pregnancy Deserves a Bigger Conversation
When I was having babies, collagen was not part of the pregnancy conversation. It wasn’t really part of the everyday wellness conversation either.
Even decades later, when collagen supplements became more common, I still thought collagen was mostly something women started taking when they noticed their skin changing or wanted healthier hair and stronger nails. That was how it was marketed. That was how most of us thought about it.
The beauty conversation wasn’t wrong. It was incomplete.
Collagen is one of the body’s main structural proteins. It is part of the framework of our skin, bones, cartilage, tendons, ligaments, blood vessels, and connective tissues. It is not a beauty ingredient that happens to be in our bodies. It is a structural component of our bodies that also shows up in our skin.
Pregnancy asks those tissues to do an extraordinary amount of adapting.
The uterus expands. The cervix changes. The abdominal wall stretches. The pelvic floor carries an increasing load. Ligaments and joints respond to hormonal and mechanical changes. Skin grows and stretches while connective tissues throughout the body continually remodel. Researchers have documented extensive collagen remodeling throughout pregnancy, including in the uterus, cervix, vaginal wall, and pelvic support tissues.
Understanding that does not automatically mean a pregnant woman needs a collagen supplement.
It does mean the question deserves more than a dismissive answer.
Can You Take Collagen During Pregnancy?
This is the question women are typing into search engines, and it deserves more than a vague yes or no.
The honest answer is that there is no single recommendation that applies to every collagen product or every pregnancy.
A plain hydrolyzed collagen peptide powder is not the same as a collagen formula that also contains probiotics, hyaluronic acid, vitamins, minerals, or other functional ingredients.
Pregnancy is not the time to make a decision based only on the word collagen on the front of the package.
The complete supplement facts panel matters. The dosage matters. The collagen sources matter. Added ingredients matter. So do allergies, medications, a woman’s health history, her prenatal vitamin, and the specific circumstances of her pregnancy.
Which is why the better question may not be: can I take collagen while I’m pregnant?
It may be: what is in the collagen supplement I’m taking, and has my healthcare provider actually reviewed the complete formula?
The Conversation I Would Have With My Doctor
This is the part that might ruffle a few feathers. I am going to say it anyway because I think it matters.
I am not anti-doctor. I am not anti-prescription medication. I am certainly not anti-good medical care.
What I have noticed over the years though is that supplements often get an automatic no in medical settings — not because anyone reviewed what was actually in the product, but because the category gets dismissed as a whole. Nutrition and supplementation are not heavily emphasized in most medical training. That is not a criticism of individual physicians. It is a systemic gap that affects the quality of the conversation women are able to have.
If I became pregnant while already taking a collagen supplement, I would not want to panic, dump it down the sink, and assume the decision had already been made for me.
I would take the complete label to my appointment and say:
I have been taking this product and I would prefer to continue unless there is an informed medical reason not to. Would you review this specific formula alongside my prenatal vitamin, medications, allergies, health history, and pregnancy — and tell me if there is a reason you recommend I stop?
That is not asking a doctor to rubber-stamp the word supplement. That is asking for an informed medical opinion on the product I am actually using.
If my doctor reviewed it and had a real concern, I would absolutely want to know. That is exactly why I would bring it into the conversation.
What I would not want is an automatic no based on the category without anyone looking at the formula.
There is a difference between medical guidance and medical habit. I want the first one.
Why the Exact Formula Matters — And Why I’m Mentioning NeuCollagen
The collagen product I take is NeuCollagen. I want to be clear that it was not created as a prenatal product and I would never present it that way. It belongs in this article because it is the formula I use personally — and because looking at it through the lens of pregnancy helped me understand exactly why the word collagen alone does not tell us enough.
NeuCollagen is not a scoop of collagen peptides in a container.
It's designed around six areas of support: bone, joints and cartilage, muscle, skin, the gut-brain connection, and brain health. The formula combines collagen Types I, II, and III with branded ingredients developed for joint comfort and mobility, muscle function, collagen production, skin hydration, and the gut-brain axis.
Collavant n2 and Mobilee address joint, cartilage, and muscle support. GPX-4 and Dermial address collagen production, skin structure, and hydration. Bioactive collagen peptides support hair and nails. And Cerebiome — a clinically studied probiotic — adds something most people do not expect to find in a collagen formula: support for the gut-brain connection and everyday stress.
That last piece is the one that made me look at this formula differently than I had looked at collagen before.
Because a pregnant woman is not simply connective tissue and skin wrapped around a growing baby.
She has a brain. She has a gut. She has emotions. She has a stress response. She has a body carrying an enormous amount — physically, emotionally, and hormonally — for nine months and well beyond. And she has a digestive system that pregnancy affects in ways nobody fully prepares her for. Nausea. Constipation. Bloating. Reflux. The digestive changes of pregnancy are some of the most physically uncomfortable parts of the experience — and they are directly connected to the gut-brain axis that a probiotic-containing formula like NeuCollagen addresses. That is not a claim that NeuCollagen treats pregnancy nausea or digestive complaints. It is an acknowledgment that gut health during pregnancy is part of the whole-body picture that deserves to be in the conversation.She has a body carrying an enormous amount — physically, emotionally, and hormonally — for nine months and well beyond.
NeuCollagen’s label directs women who are pregnant or nursing to consult their physician. That is especially important because this product contains a complete multi-ingredient formula rather than collagen peptides alone. The complete formula is what belongs in the conversation with a healthcare provider — not just the word collagen.
The Part Nobody Talks About — Mood
When people talk about collagen, mood is rarely part of the conversation.
It is part of this one.
NeuCollagen contains Cerebiome, a branded probiotic combination that has been studied in adults for the gut-brain connection, occasional stress, and cortisol response. That research does not establish that the complete NeuCollagen formula is appropriate during pregnancy. It does not mean NeuCollagen treats anxiety, prenatal depression, or postpartum depression.
What it means is that this formula acknowledges something most collagen products completely ignore.
Pregnancy is not only a physical experience.
The second-guessing I mentioned at the beginning of this post — the wondering, the praying, the exhaustion, the weight of every decision — that is real. The emotional and mental load of pregnancy does not appear in the collagen advertisements, but it is part of what a pregnant woman is carrying.
That mood and stress component is one of the reasons I find NeuCollagen interesting beyond its structural benefits. It is also one more reason the complete formula belongs in the conversation with the person caring for her pregnancy.
Why This Conversation Doesn’t End When the Baby Arrives
The baby is born. The mother’s body does not receive a memo saying everything is immediately back to normal.
The uterus begins returning toward its previous size. The placental site heals. Perineal tissue or a cesarean incision may be recovering. The abdominal wall and pelvic floor need time. Hormone levels shift. Lactation may begin. And then she starts lifting, feeding, carrying, bending, and functioning through interrupted sleep that no amount of preparation fully prepares you for.
Then she carries a newborn.
Then she carries a heavier baby.
Then she carries a toddler who wants to be held while she is also carrying the groceries.
She feeds in positions her neck and shoulders may not appreciate. She gets down on the floor and stands back up. She moves through years of lifting, reaching, disrupted sleep, and physical demands that rarely appear in the pretty newborn pictures.
This does not mean a collagen supplement has been proven to heal postpartum tissues or prevent a postpartum mood disorder. That is not the claim.
It means that a woman whose healthcare provider has reviewed and cleared her formula may be glad she did not think of collagen as a nine-month conversation.
The structural conversation does not end when the baby arrives. It changes.

What I Wish We Had Known
No one failed me by not discussing collagen when I was pregnant. The conversation simply did not exist the way it does today.
What I wish I had understood was that collagen was never only about what happens to a woman’s face as she gets older.
It was part of her structure all along.
Understanding that still would not have told me whether I should take a particular supplement during pregnancy. It would have helped me know which questions to ask.
Maybe one day one of my three granddaughters really will call me with that news. I will cry. I will be beside myself. I will immediately start remembering my own pregnancies and will probably begin sharing at least one story she did not request.
At some point I may tell her what I know now about collagen.
I will not tell her what decision she has to make.
I will tell her to understand why she’s taking something, to learn what is in the complete formula, and to bring the actual label into the conversation with the person caring for her pregnancy.
Every generation deserves the chance to make decisions with better information than the generation before it.
Nelea R. Lane
The Happy Juice Chick | Founder, The Stress Less Era
Independent Brand Partner with Amare Global #137603
936-209-7222 — yes, you can text me.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. All decisions about supplements during pregnancy or breastfeeding should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare provider who has reviewed your complete health history and the full supplement formula.
Frequently Asked Questions About Collagen During Pregnancy
Q: Can you take collagen during pregnancy?
A: There is no single answer that applies to every collagen product. Some contain primarily hydrolyzed collagen peptides while others include probiotics, vitamins, botanicals, hyaluronic acid, or other functional ingredients. Ask your obstetric provider or midwife to review the complete formula in the context of your pregnancy, medications, allergies, health history, and prenatal supplements.
Q: Is collagen safe during pregnancy?
A: Collagen is a protein naturally present in the body and in food, but that does not establish that every collagen supplement is appropriate during pregnancy. Safety depends on the complete formula, dosage, sources, added ingredients, product quality, and each woman’s individual health picture.
Q: Should I stop taking collagen when I find out I’m pregnant?
A: Don’t assume the answer in either direction. Contact your healthcare provider and bring them the complete product label — not just the product name. Ask them to review the specific formulation and explain whether there is an informed medical reason to discontinue.
Q: What does collagen do during pregnancy?
A: Collagen is part of the structural framework of skin, bone, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, blood vessels, and connective tissues. Pregnancy involves extensive tissue growth, stretching, and remodeling throughout the uterus, cervix, abdominal wall, and pelvic support structures. This does not prove that taking a collagen supplement improves pregnancy outcomes, but it helps explain why women are asking more questions about it.
Q: Can you take NeuCollagen during pregnancy?
A: NeuCollagen is not marketed as a prenatal product and Amare advises women who are pregnant or nursing to consult their physician. Because NeuCollagen contains multiple collagen types along with hyaluronic acid matrices, probiotic ingredients, and other branded compounds, the complete formula can be reviewed by a healthcare provider rather than treating it like a plain collagen peptide powder.
Q: Can you take NeuCollagen while breastfeeding?
A: The product label also advises nursing women to consult their physician. If you have concerns, a healthcare provider can review the complete formula alongside medications, allergies, health history, breastfeeding needs, and other supplements.
Q: Why might someone continue collagen after pregnancy?
A: The body continues adapting and recovering after delivery. The uterus undergoes involution, tissues heal, the abdominal wall and pelvic floor recover, and the physical demands of feeding, lifting, and carrying a newborn begin immediately. Collagen and adequate protein remain relevant to the broader postpartum nutrition conversation, though this does not prove that a particular supplement speeds recovery.
Q: Does NeuCollagen support mood?
A: NeuCollagen contains Cerebiome, a probiotic formulation studied in adults for the gut-brain connection, occasional stress, and cortisol response. It is not a treatment for anxiety, depression, prenatal depression, or postpartum depression. Persistent or concerning mood changes during pregnancy or after delivery should always be discussed promptly with a qualified healthcare professional.
Q: Does collagen affect digestion during pregnancy?
A: Digestive changes are among the most common experiences in pregnancy — nausea, constipation, bloating, and reflux affect many women at various stages. Collagen peptides themselves support gut lining integrity, which is relevant to overall digestive health. NeuCollagen also contains probiotic ingredients that address the gut-brain connection. Neither collagen nor a probiotic supplement has been proven to resolve pregnancy-specific digestive complaints, and any persistent or concerning digestive symptoms during pregnancy should be discussed with a healthcare provider. What this means practically is that the gut health component of a collagen formula is worth including in the conversation with the person caring for your pregnancy — not as a treatment, but as part of understanding what the complete formula does.




Comments